Difference between revisions of "The economics of criminal and terrorist behaviour"
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
Economic scholars distinguish: |
Economic scholars distinguish: |
||
<imagemap> |
<imagemap> |
||
− | Image:Economics_of_behaviour.png| |
+ | Image:Economics_of_behaviour.png| |
rect 1 97 214 189 [[The economics of criminal and terrorist behaviour]] |
rect 1 97 214 189 [[The economics of criminal and terrorist behaviour]] |
||
− | rect 284 2 494 95 [[ |
+ | rect 284 2 494 95 [[The economics of crime|Economics of crime]] |
− | rect 282 178 494 271 [[ |
+ | rect 282 178 494 271 [[The economics of terrorist behaviour|Economics of terrorist behaviour]] |
desc bottom-left |
desc bottom-left |
Revision as of 13:42, 4 May 2012
Contents
The economics of criminal and terrorist behaviour
Economic scholars distinguish:
Error: Image is invalid or non-existent.
Economic theory is based on the assumption that criminals and terrorists (even suicidal bombers) behave like “rational” economic agents, which implies that they face a well defined set of preferences, and will select their preferred choice of action to maximize their utility within a given resource restraint[1]. Consequently, economic theory predicts that a change in the relative price (due to for example security measures) will result in a shift of criminal and terrorist action towards the relatively cheaper activity (legal or not legal).
Related subjects
The economics of terrorist and criminal behaviour relates to:
- The economic impacts of security threats (crime & terrorism)
- The economic impacts of security measures
For other related subjects, see the clickable map below:
Error: Image is invalid or non-existent.
Footnotes and references
- ↑ Enders and Sandler (2006)
MAP
<websiteFrame> website=http://securipedia.eu/cool/index.php?wiki=securipedia.eu&concept=The_economics_of_criminal_and_terrorist_behaviour height=1023 width=100% border=0 scroll=auto align=middle </websiteFrame>
<headertabs/>